Dorset is famed in
English literature for being the native county of novelist and poet
Thomas Hardy (1840–1928), and many of the places he describes in his novels in the fictional
Wessex are in Dorset, which he renamed
South Wessex. The
National Trust owns
Thomas Hardy's Cottage, in woodland east of Dorchester, and
Max Gate, his former house in
Dorchester, Dorset. Several other writers have been influenced by the Dorset landscape, including
P. D. James whose novel
The Black Tower was inspired by
Clavell Tower in
Kimmeridge; and
Enid Blyton who spent many holidays in Dorset, eventually moving to the
Isle of Purbeck with her second husband. Many locations in her books were drawn from this area including Kirrin Castle (
Corfe Castle) and Whispering Island (
Brownsea). and P.C. Plod is thought to have been based on the then local policeman, Christopher Rone. Barnes hated what he deemed 'foreign' words and avoided the use of them in his poetry, preferring instead to use the Saxon language. Where there was no Saxon equivalent, Barnes would often invent words and phrases, such as 'push wainling' instead of perambulator. Barnes had studied
Celtic literature and often used a repetition of consonantal sounds known as
cynghanedd. This is particularly noticeable in the poem, "My Orcha'd in Linden Lea". After his death Powys's ashes were scattered on
Chesil Beach, Weymouth, Dorset. His younger brother, novelist
T. F. Powys, lived in
Chaldon Herring from 1904 until 1940, when he moved to
Mappowder, Dorset, because of the war. Chaldon Herring was the inspiration for the fictitious village of Folly Down in his novel ''
Mr. Weston's Good Wine'' and other works. Theodore Powys's brother Llewelyn, a novelist and essayist, was born in Dorchester in 1884 and also lived for a while in Chaldon with his American wife
Alyse Gregory (1884–1967) who he had married in 1924. She had been the editor of the influential journal
The Dial. His works include
Dorset Essays (1935). Both Theodore and Llewelyn also attended Sherborne School. Various other writers and artists lived in Chaldon at different times, including novelists
Sylvia Townsend Warner and
David Garnett and two more of the Powys family, the poet and novelist, Philippa Powys and the painter Gertrude Powys. Other residents were the poets
Valentine Ackland (Townsend's lover) and
Gamel Woolsey, an American, who had an affair with Llewelyn Powys. ==Sport and leisure==